Résumé : Study aim: The aim of this multicentric retrospective study was to report procedures, mortality and morbidity rate in a series of patients operated on for perforated duodenal ulcer with a laparoscopic approach. Patients and methods: Four-hundred and nineteen patients from 18 centers were included. The duration of the study was ten years (1990 to 1999). There were 299 men and 120 women aged from 19 to 98 years (mean: 48 years). The ASA scores were as follows: I (48.7%), II (31.3%), III (17.5%), IV (2.5%). The mean duration between the onset of perforation and the time of operation was 13.4 hours (range: 1-70). The surgical procedures were suture (76.7%), epiploplasty (9.9.%), only irrigation of the abdominal cavity (2.7%). Results: Conversion into laparotomy was performed in 10.6% of the patients. Mean operative time was 85 minutes. The morbidity and mortality rates were 13.4 and 1.4% respectively. Seventeen patients were reoperated because of fistula (n = 5), intra-abdominal abscess (n = 5), small bowel obstruction (n = 4), bleeding ulcer (n = 1), iatrogenic perforation of the gallbladder (n = 1) and small bowel (n = 1). Mean hospital stay was 8.5 days. All patients were discharged with a medical treatment of the peptic ulcer disease and in most of the cases, with antibiotics for Helicobacter pylori eradication. Six patients out of 96 with a medica history of chronic peptic ulcer underwent a vagotomy. Conclusion: Laparoscopic repair of perforated duodenal ulcer is a safe option providing low rates of morbidity, reoperation and mortality, and can be considered the treatment of choice. (C) 2000 Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS.